Quake Survivor Breastfeeds Nine Babies
This is a stunning story of love and generosity, as well as a testimony to the potential of human breasts to give seemingly limitless amounts of milk on demand. (more…)
This is a stunning story of love and generosity, as well as a testimony to the potential of human breasts to give seemingly limitless amounts of milk on demand. (more…)
When the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was amended by the Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978, Congress intended to include breastfeeding and expressing breast milk as protected conduct under the amendment. Unfortunately, some courts have not recognized breastfeeding and expressing breast milk as covered under the act, so a bill has been introduced to clarify Congress’ intent: the Breastfeeding Promotion Act of 2007 (H.R. 2236).
H.R. 2236 will accomplish the following:
The expansion of the definition of medical care in the Internal Revenue Code will allow women to use funds in their Medical Savings Accounts to pay for breastfeeding equipment and services without incurring a tax on the withdrawal.
By expressing (no pun intended) your support for this bill, you can help it move forward to become law. What you can do is contact your representative by phone or by letter and ask her to please co-sponsor the Breastfeeding Promotion Act (H.R. 2236). The bill was sponsored by Rep. Carol B. Maloney, N.Y., and it currently has 25 co-sponsors, among them may be your representative who could use your support.
To learn more about the Breastfeeding Promotion Act, go to the Library of Congress website and enter H.R. 2236 into the bill search engine. From there you can read the bill and see its status and co-sponsors.
Australians seem to be waking up to the need for paid maternity leave for breastfeeding moms. Union groups are getting serious with their search for answers, citing the World Health Organization’s recommendation for babies to exclusively breastfeed during the first six months. (more…)
The folks at Popular Science sure know how to write an inflammatory headline. I just about blew a fuse when I read:
New Study Rocks the Breastfeeding Boat: Scientists discover that babies fed with enriched formula developed higher IQs than their breastmilk-fed peers
Fortunately for breastfeeding mothers and their babies, that headline isn’t true. (more…)